On 08/21/2013 09:16:29 AM, Wei-cheng Wang wrote:
On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 6:12 PM, Denys Vlasenko
<vda.li...@googlemail.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 20, 2013 at 6:42 PM, Wei-cheng Wang <cole...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> You mean, this happens if foo.sh is a non-executable file
Yes. foo.sh a shell script with execute permission without #! at
the very first line.
For example,
$ echo "echo hello" > ./foo.sh
$ chmod a+x ./foo.sh
$ ./foo.sh
hello
> and /bin/sh is a symlink to busybox?
Yes. busybox, toybox, toolbox (android) and similar tools use this
way to
provides multiple Unix tools with a single executable binary.
gzip/gunzip detecting whether to force the -d flag predates them all by
a decade, and I'm told the bell labs guys were already doing it in the
70's in Programmer's Workbench...
Rob
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